The Catechism in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 36: The Nature of the Trinity (2024)
Episode Date: February 5, 2024Together, with Fr. Mike, we continue our exploration of the Church’s teachings on the nature of the Holy Trinity. We examine three main ideas. The first is the unity of the Trinity, that the Father,... Son, and Holy Spirit are all one God. The next is the Divine Persons as distinct from one another: one God, three distinct persons. As Fr. Mike states, “The Son is not the Father, the Father is not the Son, and the Holy Spirit is not either.” Finally, Fr. Mike discusses the relation between each person of the Holy Trinity. Today’s readings are Catechism paragraphs 253-256. This episode has been found to be in conformity with the Catechism by the Institute on the Catechism, under the Subcommittee on the Catechism, USCCB. For the complete reading plan, visit ascensionpress.com/ciy Please note: The Catechism of the Catholic Church contains adult themes that may not be suitable for children - parental discretion is advised.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, my name is Father Mike Schmitz and you're listening to the Catechism in a Year podcast,
where we encounter God's plan of sheer goodness for us, revealed in Scripture, and passed down
through the tradition of the Catholic faith. The Catechism in a Year is brought to you by Ascension.
In 365 days, we'll read through the Catechism of the Catholic Church, discovering our identity and
God's family as we journey together toward our heavenly home. It is day 36 and we're reading paragraphs
253 to 256. That is four short paragraphs, kind of like yesterday, but they are dense
paragraphs. A few reminders before we get started. I'm using the Ascension Edition of the Catechism,
which includes the foundations of faith approach, but you can follow along in any recent version
of the Catechism of the Catholic Church. That would be great. Also, if you want to download your own catechism and your reading plan,
just visit ascensionpress.com slash C-I-Y.
And lastly, also, one of the more thing,
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I know I just also want to thank you for all those who have supported the reduction of this podcast
with your prayers and your financial gifts.
Literally could not do it without your prayers,
without your support financially,
without your prayers spiritually, it's super helpful.
Sorry, when I say helpful, that sounds optional.
Nope, it is necessary, so thank you so much.
Today, here we are, day 36, paragraphs 253 to 256.
We're talking about the dogma of the Holy Trinity,
and so this is awesome.
So we started yesterday a subsection, right,
called the Holy Trinity in the Teaching of the Faith, and we talked about the formation of the Trinitarian dogma how yes, it is revealed the Trinity right is revealed to us in scripture that gets revealed to that God is Father, God is son, God is Holy Spirit. And then it begins to be articulated in a, I don't want to say more nuanced way, but in a way that we are trying to understand.
How is it that God is one, is a unity, but also is triune, is a trinity.
So we talked about how the church has had started to use certain terms that were received
from philosophy, terms like substance, person, hypostasis, relation, those kinds of terms.
And now we're going to talk about this.
We're going to use those terms today as we dive into the dogma of the Holy Trinity. And there are
a couple kind of key points. In fact, I'm going to say there are three key points, and they are in
paragraphs 253, 254, and 255. The last paragraph, 256, is an extended quote by St. Gregory of
Nazianzen, or St. Gregory ofian's us, wherever you want to sit.
But here are the three points.
First, the Trinity is one.
So we're gonna talk about the unity of the Trinity,
that how God is still one.
Remember in substance, in essence, only one.
Also, 254, second point, the divine persons
are really distinct from one another.
Meaning that it's not as if,
this is one of the, I guess you say, heresy that had popped up,
is well maybe if God is one, remember that first point, the Trinity is one, if God is one, then
maybe the God of the Old Testament is the Father. That's like the way God expressed himself as Father.
And then in the New Testament, the same God, same person even, just kind of expressed himself as
son. And then in the age of the church church God expresses himself in terms of Holy Spirit like as if these are modalities or like masks that
that God puts on. This is one of those times where you realize that sometimes
the analogies that we use to try to explain the Trinity they fall very very
short because we have to recognize that the divine persons are really
distinct from one another. It's not the same God with three different masks or three different modes of being. This is one God with three
distinct persons. And that's just, it's pretty remarkable, but also is a distinction that needs
to be made. And you might think, well, it's all the same. Well, it's not really all the same,
but I get, I understand the, keep it simple,
very simple for me, Father. I get that. The third point in 255 is the divine persons are
relative to one another. So keep these three points in mind. The Trinity is one. Yep, we got that.
Second point, the divine persons are really distinct from one another. The Father is not
the Son. The Son is not the Father. The Holy Spirit is neither of them. At the same time, the divine persons are relative to one another. So another way to say it is, it's in 255, it says,
because it does not divide the divine unity, the real distinction of the persons from one
another resides solely in the relationship which relate them to one another. And why is the Father
the Father? Because he is relative to the Son. Why is the son the son? Because he's relative to the father,
if that makes any sense whatsoever. Hopefully it does, because we're trying
to establish as deeply as we possibly can. Okay, who is God? What is God? One, okay,
God at unity, but also God is a trinity of persons. And so he's relative in
himself. And that's, remember those terms we used yesterday,
that God, or the day before yesterday, God in himself is Trinity, God in himself is unity.
And so hopefully this makes sense as we continue to dive deeply. The last paragraph we're going
to look at today, 256, is this beautiful, really just beautiful explanation by St. Gregory of Naziansus who just says,
okay, I know, I mean, he's not saying this,
I'm paraphrasing, I know that this can be very confusing.
I know that it's hard to hold all these things
in your mind at once.
We talked about that with Saint Augustine yesterday.
And yet we get to be captured and captivated by this God.
We get to be captured and captivated by this God. We get to be captured and captivated
by the very love of God, God who is love.
That's the depths of whom we are plunging into today
as we listen to these next four paragraphs,
Gatacism 253 to 256.
Let's say a prayer before we get started.
Father in heaven, we praise you and glorify you.
We know that you revealed yourself through the Son.
You continue to reveal yourself and come to us in the power of the Holy Spirit.
You are one God and three divine persons and we just ask that you please
not only help us to see your work in this world and experience
your grace in this world, but also help us to understand who you are in yourself,
not just in your works, but who you are in yourself.
And let this time that we listen to these four paragraphs
in the Catechism, let them just open our minds
and open our hearts that since we know you better,
we can love you better.
In Jesus' name we pray, amen.
In the name of the Father, and of the Son,
and of the Holy Spirit.
As I said, it's day 36, We're reading paragraphs 253 to 256.
The dogma of the Holy Trinity.
The Trinity is one.
We do not confess three gods, but one God in three persons.
The conceptual Trinity.
The divine persons do not share the one divinity among themselves,
but each of them is God whole and entire. As the Eleventh Council of Toledo said,
The Father is that which the Son is, the Son that which the Father is, the Father and the
Son that which the Holy Spirit is, that is, by nature one God.
In the words of the Fourthth Lateran Council in the
year 1215, each of the persons is that supreme reality, viz, the divine substance, essence,
or nature. The divine persons are really distinct from
one another. As Phideas Damassi stated, God is one, but not solitary. Father, Son, Holy Spirit are not simply names designating modalities of the divine being,
for they are really distinct from one another.
As the 11th Council of Toledo stated,
He is not the Father who is the Son, nor is the Son he who is the Father,
nor is the Holy Spirit he who is the Father or the Son.
They are distinct from one another in their relations of origin.
As the fourth letter in counsel stated,
it is the Father who generates, the Son who is begotten,
and the Holy Spirit who proceeds.
The divine unity is triune.
The divine persons are relative to one another.
Because it does not divide the divine unity, the real distinction of the persons from one
another resides solely in the relationships which relate them to one another.
As the 11th Council of Toledo stated, in the relational names of the persons, the Father
is related to the Son, the Son to the Father, and the Holy Spirit to both.
While they are called three persons in view of their relations,
we believe in one nature or substance. Indeed. Everything in them is one where there is no
opposition of relationship. Because of that unity, the Father is holy in the Son and holy
in the Holy Spirit. The Son is holy in the Father and holy in the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit is holy
in the Father and holy in the Son.
St. Gregory of Naziansus, also called the Theologian, entrusts this summary of Trinitarian faith
to the catechumens of Constantinople, saying,
Above all, guard for me this great deposit of faith for which I live and fight, which
I want to take with me as a companion and which makes me bear all evils and despise all pleasures.
I mean the profession of faith in the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit.
I entrust it to you today.
Buy it.
I am soon going to plunge you into water and raise you up from it.
I give it to you as the companion and patron of your whole life.
I give you but one divinity and power, existing one in three, and containing the three in
a distinct way. Divinity without disparity of substance or nature, without superior degree
that raises up, or inferior degree that casts down. The infinite co-naturality of three
infinites. Each person, considered in himself, is entirely
God. The three considered together, I have not even begun to think of unity when the trinity bathes
me in its splendor. I have not even begun to think of the trinity when unity grasps me.
Okay, so there we have today. I said it was going to be dense and I was, you know, I'm not lying. It is.
So maybe remember those three points. First, the Trinity is one. Second, the divine persons are really
distinct from one another. And third, the divine persons are relative to one another. And so let's go
back over this. Once again, the Trinity is one. It might, you might think that this is redundant, just to keep going back to, okay, this is essence.
God's essence, His substance, His nature is one.
He is one divine being.
It could be annoying you to go back and say,
I know, I got it, move on.
So I get it, but we have to establish this
and never ever forget that when we start talking
about Father, Son and Holy Spirit,
we are not talking about three gods. This is absolutely that's that's, you know, completely
against what God has revealed that is ultimately called heresy. And so God is one. Trinity is one.
The next part is so important for us that the divine persons are really distinct from one another.
And again, because there's heresies, speaking of heresies, that have come
up. So the first few sentences of that paragraph, first makes the statement we just said,
the divine persons are really distinct from one another. Great. And then the counselor Fide's
Damacy is quoted and it says, God is one, but not solitary. Yep, completely makes sense.
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are not simply names designating
modalities of the divine being. Again, when you say modalities, what that means is like
modes of being. Like again, that here is one God, right? We know one God. And He sometimes reveals
Himself as Father, sometimes reveals as Son, sometimes reveals as Holy Spirit, just different
modes that He expresses Himself in. So the Father is not the Son. The Son is not the
Father. The Father is not the Holy Spirit. The Son is not the Holy Spirit. And that sense of being
able to recognize that truth is so very, very important for all of us. Why is that important?
Because if these were simply modalities, if there were simply ways that the one God expressed
himself, then he would still be monolithic,olithic. He could never be a trinity of persons. The very deepest identity of God would not be love
because it would simply be one monolithic God expressing himself in three different modes.
But we know that God truly has revealed that he is love, that the depth of his identity is that he is love.
That's only possible if God is three distinct persons and yet one divine being.
And so it's not just three different ways of expressing his existence or
expressing his action in the world, but three distinct persons.
In fact, the last quote in that paragraph, 254 says, it's actually from the
fourth ladder in
counsel, once again, in the 13th century. It is the Father who generates the Son who
is begotten and the Holy Spirit who proceeds. Now that is very important,
but what our minds can do sometimes is, well, if the Father generates the Son is
begotten and the Holy Spirit proceeds, that means the Father's number one, the
Son is number two, and the Holy Spirit's number three, in order of importance, right?
That's what we can start to think.
If the Father generates the Holy Spirit,
as the Son is begotten, the Holy Spirit proceeds,
then it's like, okay, that makes sense.
If you wanna rank the persons of the Trinity,
well, the Father is superior, the Son is less,
and the Holy Spirit is even less.
That's why we're so important that all of us hold our
horses. When we start to think that, go back to what Saint Gregory of Naziansus said. He said,
there's divinity without disparity of substance or nature. And he says this very, very clearly,
without superior degree that raises up or inferior degree that casts down the infinite
co-naturality of three infinites. And that is so important for us.
Each person, considered in himself, is entirely God. Entirely God. So the Father is not more God
than the Son or the Holy Spirit. Even though the Father is the one who generates and the Son is
the one who is begotten and the Holy Spirit is the one who proceeds.
It's not actually not even order of importance and it's not in order of time
because this is from all eternity. From all eternity God has existed, Father, Son,
and Holy Spirit. It wasn't as at one point the Father existed and then He
generated the Son and then the Holy Spirit proceeded after that. The time, nope,
that's not one of the things we recognize from all eternity
God has always been and will always be
Father, Son and Holy Spirit eternally generating eternally begotten eternally proceeding now if that's kind of a mind bender
That is okay completely remember Saint Augustine yesterday
But eternally begotten eternally begetting and eternally
Proceeding that's very, very important. Finally, almost finally, the third point. Remember the first point we talked about
many times, the Trinity is one. Second point we've been talking about, the divine persons are
really distinct from one another. The third point is the divine persons are relative to one another.
Now, this might have been a confusing quote and
that quote was from the Council of Florence because it uses the term holy
but it's W-H-O-L-L-Y meaning fully right whole holy but who else uses word holy
H-O-L-Y for Holy Spirit so I'm gonna kind of paraphrase a little bit but that
Council of Florence had said because of that unity
Remember the whole here's the Trinity. That's a unity because of that unity the father is holy in the Sun or entirely in the Sun and
Entirely in the Holy Spirit the Sun is entirely in the father and entirely in the Holy Spirit and the Holy Spirit is entirely in the father and
Entirely in the Sun so that's what that term, Holy, you might have missed it because like,
Holy, Holy, Holy, Holy, Holy.
So what we're saying is, is, okay, listen to this now.
The Father is entirely in the Son and in the Holy Spirit.
The Son is entirely in the Father and in the Holy Spirit.
The Holy Spirit is entirely in the Father and entirely in the Son.
This is an incredible, incredible mystery. Without
inner mixture, without the Son also being the Father, no, no, they're related to
each other. Without the Son, the Holy Spirit also being the Son, like, no, they're
distinct from each other and yet wholly in each other as well, which is, again, a
great mystery. But it's this mystery that St. Gregory of
Naziansus highlights. And he says, we already talked about this, each person considered in himself
is entirely God. The three considered together, I have not even begun to think of unity when the
Trinity bathes me in its splendor. I have not even begun to think of the Trinity when unity grasps me.
splendor, I have not even begun to think of the Trinity when unity grasps me. And that's where we're gonna land today. Because again, we cannot comprehend. We
cannot apprehend. We cannot grasp onto the Trinity. But the Trinity God does grasp us.
We can't even begin to plunge the depths of the mystery of who God is in himself.
And yet God comes to us, he enters into our world.
He enters into our lives and our reality.
And so here we are today, just saying God,
please reveal yourself to me even more.
And all that is not revealed to me.
Let that take possession of me.
Take hold of me, grasp onto me and never let go.
We just pray for that.
I know that's a challenge,
but here we are on day 36, just trucking away. And so please know that I am praying for you.
Please pray for me. My name is Father Mike. I cannot wait to see you tomorrow. God bless.